Search Results
Coastal Zone Initiative
Healthy ecosystems and vibrant wildlife populations are critical to ensuring that human communities thrive. The Coastal Zone Initiative (CZI) is committed to addressing these issues and working toward maintaining and restoring resilient habitats that benefit wildlife and people. Manomet CZI works to increase the Beneficial Use of Dredged Material (BUDM) for habitat restoration and resource protection in the US. For decades dredged materials were simply viewed as a “Spoil” and something that need to be disposed. An effort is underway to treat these sediments as a resource to nourish our coasts and associated habitats. We facilitate conversations among Federal, State, Local, and NGO partners to identify lessons learned, challenges and opportunities for coastal habitat restoration.
Sea Run Fish
Restoration of river herring is critical to rebuilding coastal ecosystems and strengthening climate resilience as the Gulf of Maine continues to warm. Manomet supports community-driven river herring stewardship and is tracking the impact of such efforts on the health of river herring runs. River herring is a collective term for two species, alewives and blueback herring. They are anadromous, which means they live primarily in the ocean and migrate upstream each spring to spawn in freshwater lakes and ponds before returning to the ocean. Historically, they have been foundational species in the Gulf of Maine ecosystem, comprising an important source of forage for birds, mammals, and commercially valuable species including cod and haddock. Over the last four hundred years, dams,...
Interview with Scott Johnston, US Fish and Wildlife
One of Manomet’s core beliefs is that by working in partnership, we can more effectively influence and scale our impact. One key example of this partnership is the Atlantic Flyway Shorebird Initiative (AFSI), led by the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). Manomet serves on the Executive Committee of AFSI, working closely with Scott Johnston of the USFWS. We had the opportunity to sit down with Scott to get an update on the ASFI business plan and some of his other work. Tell us a little bit about your work at the USFWS. I am the Branch Chief for Populations in the Division of Migratory Birds, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Northeast Region. The Branch of Populations focuses on waterfowl,...
Resilient Habitats
Mending nature to benefit wildlife and human communities For animals that travel tremendous distances — like migratory shorebirds that span continents, or fish that leave ocean life to spawn in rivers and streams — a diverse network of healthy and intact coastal, riverine, wetland, and grassland habitats are critical to ensuring that migratory populations thrive. At Manomet, our greatest conservation accomplishments involve our ability to work with others, integrating cutting-edge science, targeted management actions, and long-term monitoring to improve habitat. Throughout the Americas, we identify threats to nature and develop measures to alleviate pressure on the most valuable and sensitive ecosystems. Healthy ecosystems and vibrant wildlife populations are critical to ensuring that human communities thrive. Manomet is committed to understanding...
Georgia Bight Shorebird Conservation Initiative
The Georgia Bight Shorebird Conservation Initiative was launched in May 2018 to address specific threats to the shorebirds dependent on the southeastern region of the Atlantic Coast. By increasing the involvement of the public, as well as state and federal agencies, we strive to build a local, holistic culture of shorebird conservation to ensure the region continues to provide the resources necessary to sustain shorebirds throughout the year. For many shorebirds our focal geographic area, which encompasses coastal South Carolina, Georgia and northeastern Florida, provides exceptional habitat. This section of the coast is studded with barrier islands and highly dynamic inlets and estuaries that support more than 300,000 shorebirds annually. The unique curved coastline of the Georgia Bight results in...
Arctic Shorebird Research
In recent decades, shorebird populations have plummeted. Without effective and immediate action, some species could disappear entirely in the coming decades. Scientists know that populations are falling precipitously, but they don’t know exactly why. Through our Arctic shorebird research, Manomet researchers hope to unlock some of the mysteries of these dramatic shorebird population declines.
American Oystercatcher Recovery
By 2009, human encroachment, habitat loss, destruction and other threats had reduced the entire North American population of American Oystercatchers to around 10,200 individuals. Our research team works to increase this number by coordinating the American Oystercatcher Working Group, which implements rangewide research and management efforts that promote the conservation of American Oystercatchers and their habitats. Manomet supports participating organizations with fundraising, coordinates the monitoring that serves as the common success measure for the initiative, and conducts research on factors limiting Oystercatcher populations. We currently manage and monitor nearly 400 nesting pairs of oystercatcher in the Northeast. Our key strategies respond directly to the issues raised in the Business Plan for the Conservation of the American Oystercatcher, and include: Predation...
The Red Knot That Flew to the Moon and Back
"On April 1, 2026, humans launched Artemis II toward the Moon. But one small bird had already logged that journey on its wings. In February 1995, on a beach at Río Grande on the Atlantic coast of Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, scientists banded hundreds of Red Knots (Calidris canutus rufa), each with a small, numbered flag. One of them—B95—would become a legend. Banded by Argentine biologist Patricia González, it was resighted many times over the years, from Lagoa do Peixe in Brazil to Delaware Bay, and recaptured at least three times. In 2007, when at least 14 years old, it was described as “as fit as a three-year-old.” Every year, rufa Red Knots travel nearly 9,000 miles from the southern tip of South America to the Arctic—and back again. B95 kept going. Year after year. Through storms, across continents, in a...
New Tools Track the Return and Future of River Herring
Each spring, river herring begin a remarkable journey from the ocean back into freshwater rivers and streams to spawn. Tracking that movement and understanding what happens next are critical to rebuilding populations that have declined across much of their range. To support that effort, Manomet and partners in the Gulf of Maine River Herring Network have developed two new data platforms that bring together monitoring efforts across the region, offering a clearer picture of both returning adults and the next generation of fish. The first platform, ECOFISH, compiles data on adult river herring returning to freshwater habitats each year. By aggregating counts from monitoring sites along the U.S. East Coast, it helps track migration patterns and population trends over time....
A Transformative Nine Weeks on the Bluff: a Reflection from Intern Julia Beyer
I’ve been incredibly lucky to work as the Education and Outreach intern at Manomet in the summer of 2025 through my Smith College Praxis internship. I’m double majoring in Environmental Science and Policy and Latin American Studies, and I spent nine weeks immersed in conservation outreach, environmental education, and fieldwork. One morning during those nine weeks, I woke up before dawn to accompany banding intern Grace Whitten to MAPS banding at Myles Standish State Forest. We walked the net lanes at precisely timed intervals, moving quietly through the morning, talking with Grace and Andrew Single about banding experiences, plant evolution, and whatever else our slightly foggy brains drifted toward while we waited for the next net run. At the end...